This dataset includes realistic client arrival patterns and realistic application
workloads that are used to evaluate effects of high-density deployments of
interfering access points to IEEE 802.11 WLAN performance. Both wired and
wireless frame dump traces are provided from the experiments in ORBIT wireless
research testbed involving four access points and seventy-five stations.
[xml metadata]
Note: This metadata was prepared by the CRAWDAD team and verified by the data set (or tool) authors. We have made every effort to ensure its accuracy, but urge all users to consider the metadata and data carefully and be sure that their use in research is consistent with the nature and limitations of the data. We welcome any corrections.
This metadata was prepared based on the following reference(s):
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} data set rutgers/ap_density (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | This dataset includes realistic client arrival patterns and realistic application
workloads that are used to evaluate effects of high-density deployments of
interfering access points to IEEE 802.11 WLAN performance. Both wired and
wireless frame dump traces are provided from the experiments in ORBIT wireless
research testbed involving four access points and seventy-five stations. |
| release date | 2007-08-09 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| authors | Mesut Ali Ergin Kishore Ramachandran Marco Gruteser
|
|
web site
| http://www.winlab.rutgers.edu/~ergin/mobicom2007/ |
|
wiki
|
go to the wiki page for this data set
|
| keyword | 802.11, ORBIT, tcpdump |
| measurement purposes | Network Performance Analysis
|
| network type | 802.11 infrastructure |
| environment | Experiments are conducted to measure effects of having multiple
interfering APs that serve many users with realistic traffic workloads. |
| network | The experiments were performed on the 400-node grid of ORBIT, wireless research testbed.
Placement of nodes follow a high density grid-type deployment in a 20 meters by 20 meters
isolated area with approximately 1 meter inter-node distances.
ORBIT provides access to small form factor PCs with 1GHz Via C3 CPU, 512 MB RAM,
20 GB hard disk, three Gbps ethernet ports, and two Atheros AR5002X Mini PCI 802.11a/b/g
(AR5212 MAC Baseband Processor + AR5112 Dual-band Radio-on-a-Chip) WLAN adapters.
We have used GNU/Linux operating system with 2.6.18 series kernel, and Madwifi driver
svn revision 2118. For access points, we have used Madwifi driver's AP mode
with transparent bridging to that particular ORBIT node's Gbps Ethernet interface.
All application services (WWW, and D-ITG -- VoIP and Exponential traffic) are also
hosted on ORBIT nodes that are connected to the same switched Gbps data backbone. |
| collection | |
|
tracesets included
| rutgers/ap_density/workload (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/wired (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/wireless (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-workload-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace set rutgers/ap_density/workload (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/workload},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | This traceset includes realistic client arrival patterns and realistic application
workloads that are used to evaluate effects of high-density deployments of
interfering access points to IEEE 802.11 WLAN performance. |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement purposes | Network Performance Analysis
|
| network type | 802.11 infrastructure |
| methodology | The experiments are conducted to measure effects of having multiple interfering APs
that serve many users with realistic traffic workloads as follows:
- Clients follow an arrival pattern to associate with the AP(s). The station arrival pattern
was created similar to the real users returning from lunch at the 64th IETF conference.
(The trace rutgers/ap_density/workload/sta_arrivals contains the arrival pattern.)
- As clients arrive, they select an application profile (WWW, exponential traffic, or VoIP)
randomly to match the percentage of traffic distribution that is observed in a typical
office setting. After selecting their profiles, clients start the application session and
generate traffic until the end of the experiment.
(The trace rutgers/ap_density/workload/realisticTraffic contains the traffic workload.) |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
traces included
| rutgers/ap_density/workload/sta_arrivals (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/workload/realisticTraffic (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-wired-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace set rutgers/ap_density/wired (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/wired},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | This traceset includes wired frame dump traces collected from the experiments
in ORBIT wireless research testbed involving four access points and seventy-five
stations. |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement purposes | Network Performance Analysis
|
| network type | 802.11 infrastructure |
| methodology | The experiments are conducted to measure effects of having multiple
interfering APs that serve many users with realistic traffic workloads.
The AP and clients use IEEE 802.11a protocol on channel 52 which is
confirmed to be unoccupied throughout the experiment. Clients follow
an arrival pattern (see rutgers/ap_density/workload/ap_arrivals) to associate
with the AP(s).
If more than one AP is available, default AP selection algorithm
on driver is used (highest RSSI AP gets picked). As clients arrive,
they select an application profile (WWW, exponential traffic, or VoIP)
randomly to match the percentage of traffic distribution that is observed
in a typical office setting. After selecting their profiles, clients start
the application session and generate traffic until the end of the experiment.
Cumulative system throughput (as measured flowing between APs and application
server) determined system performance in hauling traffic back and forth between
wired and wireless networks. Multiple runs of the same experiment resulted
in similar behaviors, thus only the traces from one instance of
each experiment are made available to public. |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
traces included
| rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_75STA (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_75STA (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/3AP_75STA (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/4AP_75STA (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-wireless-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace set rutgers/ap_density/wireless (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/wireless},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | This traceset includes wireless frame dump traces collected from the experiments
in ORBIT wireless research testbed involving four access points and seventy-five
stations. |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement purposes | Network Performance Analysis
|
| network type | 802.11 infrastructure |
| methodology | The experiments are conducted to measure effects of having multiple
interfering APs that serve many users with realistic traffic workloads.
The AP and clients use IEEE 802.11a protocol on channel 52 which is
confirmed to be unoccupied throughout the experiment. Clients follow
an arrival pattern (see rutgers/ap_density/workload/ap_arrivals) to associate
with the AP(s).
If more than one AP is available, default AP selection algorithm
on driver is used (highest RSSI AP gets picked). As clients arrive,
they select an application profile (WWW, exponential traffic, or VoIP)
randomly to match the percentage of traffic distribution that is observed
in a typical office setting. After selecting their profiles, clients start
the application session and generate traffic until the end of the experiment.
Cumulative system throughput (as measured flowing between APs and application
server) determined system performance in hauling traffic back and fort between
wired and wireless networks. Multiple runs of the same experiment resulted
in similar behaviors, thus only the traces from one instance of
each experiment are made available to public. |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
traces included
| rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_4STA (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_8STA (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_16STA (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_4STA (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_8STA (v. 2007-08-09) rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_16STA (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-workload-sta_arrivals-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/workload/sta_arrivals (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/workload/sta_arrivals},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | This trace contains station inter-arrival times in seconds at each line
for a total of 75 stations. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | This file contains station inter-arrival times in seconds at each line
for a total of 75 stations. A control loop like:
for (i=1;i<75;i++)
{
create_station(i);
sleep( read_line(i, sta_arrivals.txt) );
}
will create station arrival patterns similar to the real users returning
from lunch at the 64th IETF conference. This arrival pattern is extracted
from the UCSB 64nd IETF conference traces. In processing those traces,
a station is assumed to be inactive if no IP traffic (both directions) is
detected for more than five minutes for that particular node. First 75 inactive
nodes that start communication after the lunch hour are captured in the trace file. |
| format | Plain Text (UNIX CR/LF) |
| download url | Download (162 Bytes txt) (MD5 Hash: 560e857b97de6fc22aabbba30d899e37) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/workload (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-workload-realisticTraffic-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/workload/realisticTraffic (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/workload/realisticTraffic},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | This trace contains a synthetic office work-load based on sniffer measurements
obtained in our academic office environment for a single access point serving
about 50 students and faculty. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | Since inter-cell interference is affected by end-user workloads,
we constructed a synthetic office work-load in addition to bulk TCP-only workloads
we used in PER experiments. The office workload is based on sniffer measurements
obtained in our academic office environment for a single access point serving
about 50 students and faculty. These measurements indicate that 97% of packets
use the TCP protocol and about 75% of traffic is generated by web traffic.
These measurements are reasonably consistent with (except for a 20% increase
in web traffic) an earlier analysis of SIGCOMM 2001 conference traces covering
4 APs and 195 stations. Bursty web traffic in our workload follows the self-similar
ON-OFF traffic model given by Barford and Crovella (ACM SIGMETRICS 1998).
We emulate the HTML transfer, browser processing, and HTML object retrieval phases
with wget page retrieval tool. User's thinking time X between page accesses is
Pareto distributed, with parameters k=1.5 and x_m=1, as suggested by Barford and
Crovella. The remaining share of the workload comprises a mix of VoIP traffic
(over UDP/IP) using the G.711 codec with H.323 signalling (3% of overall volume),
and TCP packet transfers with exponentially distributed interarrival times
(21% of the overall volume on average) as background traffic. These flows are
emulated using the D-ITG traffic generator v.2.4.3. |
| format | Plain Text Files (UNIX CR/LF in GZip Compressed Tar)
In the provided trace collection, three files are included: paretoSamples.txt,
objectSizes.txt, DITG_samples.txt. Pareto sample file is from one instantiation of
our pareto random number generator, giving user thinking time values (over 500K values)
distributed between 15 and 100 (seconds). Object size file is a collection of
the sizes (in bytes) of random web objects (from http://www.winlab.rutgers.edu website).
These objects include plain html pages, html pages with images, and various file
downloads (presentation files, source code tarballs, etc.). The way to generate
WWW traffic using these traces should be as follows: Each node uses a disjoint
part of the pareto sample file and requests a random object (of sizes listed
in objectSizes.txt) by calling wget to a web server (e.g., Apache httpd, or MS IIS)
that serves objects of these sizes. Then node goes to sleep (emulation of browsing
and thinking) for an interval given by the next value in paretoSamples.txt file.
Process continues with another random object from the list. The rest of the realistic
traffic pattern (as explained above) is created by DITG and examples of how we created
exponential and CBR type TCP traffic, and VoIP traffic are provided in DITG_samples.txt
file. |
| download url | Download (2.3 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: b1c02140037db74c5887bf49f9d9d4d5) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/workload (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-1AP_75STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_75STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_75STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Traffic Dump for 1 AP 75 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Traffic Dump for 1 AP 75 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen from the wired port of
the access point(s), for the application traffic travelling between
wireless stations and application servers. The volume of this traffic
is considered to be a metric for the performance of the WLAN under
experimentation, since WLAN is deployed to haul traffic back and forth
between wired and wireless networks. Trace starts at UNIX epoch 1168535241
and finishes at 1168535821 (i.e. lasting approximately 10 minutes).
These traces are from the experiments that use the realistic traffic
workload as explained above. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (27.1 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: 0392bf4b70b6e7064c20bb5a9da68c2c) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wired (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-2AP_75STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_75STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_75STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Traffic Dump for 2 AP 75 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Traffic Dump for 2 AP 75 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen from the wired port of
the access point(s), for the application traffic travelling between
wireless stations and application servers. The volume of this traffic
is considered to be a metric for the performance of the WLAN under
experimentation, since WLAN is deployed to haul traffic back and forth
between wired and wireless networks. Trace starts at UNIX epoch 1168540183
and finishes at 1168540763 (i.e. lasting approximately 10 minutes).
These traces are from the experiments that use the realistic traffic
workload as explained above. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (25.2 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: 0e4e387c891792485f510dcf2fadd0da) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wired (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-3AP_75STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/3AP_75STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/3AP_75STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Traffic Dump for 3 AP 75 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Traffic Dump for 3 AP 75 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen from the wired port of
the access point(s), for the application traffic travelling between
wireless stations and application servers. The volume of this traffic
is considered to be a metric for the performance of the WLAN under
experimentation, since WLAN is deployed to haul traffic back and forth
between wired and wireless networks. Trace starts at UNIX epoch 1168542112
and finishes at 1168542752 (i.e. lasting approximately 10 minutes).
These traces are from the experiments that use the realistic traffic
workload as explained above. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (26.6 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: 515709ec54e96bb39fefad69ab919f1d) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wired (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-4AP_75STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/4AP_75STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/4AP_75STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Traffic Dump for 4 AP 75 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Traffic Dump for 4 AP 75 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen from the wired port of
the access point(s), for the application traffic travelling between
wireless stations and application servers. The volume of this traffic
is considered to be a metric for the performance of the WLAN under
experimentation, since WLAN is deployed to haul traffic back and forth
between wired and wireless networks. Trace starts at UNIX epoch 1168543425
and finishes at 1168544065 (i.e. lasting approximately 10 minutes).
These traces are from the experiments that use the realistic traffic
workload as explained above. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (23.0 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: efed2e8d5911ce71b3d32a56ad982e50) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wired (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-1AP_4STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_4STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_4STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Wireless Traffic Dump for 1 AP 4 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Wireless Traffic Dump for 1 AP 4 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen by a wireless sniffer placed
in the close vicinity of the WLAN being tested. There is no other process
on the wireless sniffer and this trace is later used to derive PER statistics
due to collisions together with driver packet error statistics from stations
and AP(s). Due to the nature of the experiment, workload is constructed
from clients to a central server by using 1300-byte frames sent using
TCP at the maximum possible pace TCP allows. Trace lasts about five minutes. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (13.2 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: 328351b0b89915aacbfe764576b5b089) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wireless (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-1AP_8STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_8STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_8STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Wireless Traffic Dump for 1 AP 8 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Wireless Traffic Dump for 1 AP 8 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen by a wireless sniffer placed
in the close vicinity of the WLAN being tested. There is no other process
on the wireless sniffer and this trace is later used to derive PER statistics
due to collisions together with driver packet error statistics from stations
and AP(s). Due to the nature of the experiment, workload is constructed
from clients to a central server by using 1300-byte frames sent using
TCP at the maximum possible pace TCP allows. Trace lasts about five minutes. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (14.0 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: 1836308ff96c23397d8e801af92dbcad) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wireless (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-1AP_16STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_16STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/1AP_16STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Wireless Traffic Dump for 1 AP 16 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Wireless Traffic Dump for 1 AP 16 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen by a wireless sniffer placed
in the close vicinity of the WLAN being tested. There is no other process
on the wireless sniffer and this trace is later used to derive PER statistics
due to collisions together with driver packet error statistics from stations
and AP(s). Due to the nature of the experiment, workload is constructed
from clients to a central server by using 1300-byte frames sent using
TCP at the maximum possible pace TCP allows. Trace lasts about five minutes. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (15.2 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: 3b77ab830c70cff990e7aa4b753e0dee) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wireless (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-2AP_4STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_4STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_4STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Wireless Traffic Dump for 2 AP 4 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Wireless Traffic Dump for 2 AP 4 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen by a wireless sniffer placed
in the close vicinity of the WLAN being tested. There is no other process
on the wireless sniffer and this trace is later used to derive PER statistics
due to collisions together with driver packet error statistics from stations
and AP(s). Due to the nature of the experiment, workload is constructed
from clients to a central server by using 1300-byte frames sent using
TCP at the maximum possible pace TCP allows. Trace lasts about five minutes. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (12.2 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: b974a7e1cf013684bb4880013b3e86fa) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wireless (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-2AP_8STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_8STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_8STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Wireless Traffic Dump for 2 AP 8 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Wireless Traffic Dump for 2 AP 8 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen by a wireless sniffer placed
in the close vicinity of the WLAN being tested. There is no other process
on the wireless sniffer and this trace is later used to derive PER statistics
due to collisions together with driver packet error statistics from stations
and AP(s). Due to the nature of the experiment, workload is constructed
from clients to a central server by using 1300-byte frames sent using
TCP at the maximum possible pace TCP allows. Trace lasts about five minutes. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (12.6 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: 4a9674ce8f0c7130dd84399d5b1358db) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wireless (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
version
| v. 2007-08-09 |
|
changes
| the initial version |
|
bibtex
|
@MISC{rutgers-ap_density-tcpdump-2AP_16STA-2007-08-09,
author = {Mesut Ali Ergin and Kishore Ramachandran and Marco Gruteser},
title = {{CRAWDAD} trace rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_16STA (v. 2007-08-09)},
howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/rutgers/ap_density/tcpdump/2AP_16STA},
month = aug,
year = 2007
}
|
| metadata last modified | 2007-09-21 |
| summary | Wireless Traffic Dump for 2 AP 16 STA Experiment. |
| derived | false |
| release date | 2007-09-21 |
| measurement start | 2007-01-11 |
| measurement end | 2007-01-11 |
| configuration | - Wireless Traffic Dump for 2 AP 16 STA Experiment
This file contains a frame dump file as seen by a wireless sniffer placed
in the close vicinity of the WLAN being tested. There is no other process
on the wireless sniffer and this trace is later used to derive PER statistics
due to collisions together with driver packet error statistics from stations
and AP(s). Due to the nature of the experiment, workload is constructed
from clients to a central server by using 1300-byte frames sent using
TCP at the maximum possible pace TCP allows. Trace lasts about five minutes. |
| format | TCPDump File (GZip Compressed Tar) |
| download url | Download (14.7 MB tgz) (MD5 Hash: 3f8703e16720aee65af24688b8a71c07) from US UK |
| parent data | rutgers/ap_density/wireless (v. 2007-08-09)
|
|
category
| inproceedings |
| authors | Mesut Ali Ergin Kishore Ramachandran Marco Gruteser
|
| title | Understanding the effect of access point density on wireless LAN performance |
| booktitle | MobiCom '07: Proceedings of the 13th annual ACM international conference on Mobile computing and networking |
| year | 2007 |
| pages | 350-353 |
| address | Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
| keywords | measurement |
| keywords | wireless |
| keywords | rutgers/ap_density |
| keywords | crawdad |
| download url | http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1287853.1287902 |
| publisher | ACM Press |
| abstract | In this paper, we present a systematic experimental study of the effect of
inter-cell interference on IEEE 802.11 performance. With increasing penetration
of WiFi into residential areas and usage in ad hoc conference settings, chaotic
unplanned deployments are becoming the norm rather than an exception. These
networks often operate many nearby access points and stations on the same
channel, either due to lack of coordination or insufficient available channels.
Thus, inter-cell interference is common but not well-understood. According to
conventional wisdom, the efficiency of an 802.11 network is determined by the
number of active clients. Surprisingly, we find that with a typical
TCP-dominant workload, cumulative system throughput is characterized by the
number of interfering access points rather than the number of clients. We find
that due to TCP flow control, the number of backlogged stations in such a
network equals twice the number of access points. Thus, a single access point
network proved very robust even with over one hundred clients. Multiple
interfering access points, however, lead to an increase in collisions that
reduces throughput and affects volume of traffic in the network. |
| related data/tools | rutgers/ap_density
|